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The structure of cognitive strategies for wayfinding decisions

Otmar Bock, Ju-Yi Huang, Oezguer A. Onur, Daniel Memmert

2023Psychological Research17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Literature proposes five distinct cognitive strategies for wayfinding decisions at intersections. Our study investigates whether those strategies rely on a generalized decision-making process, on two frame-specific processes—one in an egocentric and the other in an allocentric spatial reference frame, and/or on five strategy-specific processes. Participants took six trips along a prescribed route through five virtual mazes, each designed for decision-making by a particular strategy. We found that wayfinding accuracy on trips through a given maze correlated significantly with the accuracy on trips through another maze that was designed for a different reference frame ( r between-frames = 0.20). Correlations were not significantly higher if the other maze was designed for the same reference frame ( r within-frames = 0.19). However, correlations between trips through the same maze were significantly higher than those between trips through different mazes that were designed for the same reference frame ( r within-maze = 0.52). We conclude that wayfinding decisions were based on a generalized cognitive process, as well as on strategy-specific processes, while the role of frame-specific processes—if any—was relatively smaller. Thus, the well-established dichotomy of egocentric versus allocentric spatial representations did not translate into a similar, observable dichotomy of decision-making.

Topics & Concepts

TRIPS architectureCognitionReference frameFrame (networking)Process (computing)PsychologyCognitive psychologySpatial cognitionCognitive mapComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceNeuroscienceOperating systemParallel computingTelecommunicationsSpatial Cognition and NavigationGeographic Information Systems StudiesCategorization, perception, and language
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